I may have a hypothesis that explains dark energy and the creation of the universe.

So to start, I have a burning passion for physics(Only slightly exaggerated). I read papers whenever I can and love reading about new hypotheses put forward. The concepts come really easy to me, and I'm currently going to school to learn all the math behind them. But I periodically have some ideas that seem "viable."

My most recent one is probably my second craziest idea. It is basically that gravitational force can "slip" its way past the center of a black hole given the right conditions. What this would mean is that the direction of gravity would continue along past the center and instead of pulling space time towards it from all directions, it would then push space time away from it in all directions. This could be taken as the mechanism behind the expansion of the universe. Though I'm not sure what, if anything would happen to the black hole. Maybe spontaneous destruction of energy?

Now this adds another implication to a theory on one of the models of the universe. Specifically a model that says the universe is infinite and constantly expanding, and has "pockets" of universe pop into existence. The way I reached this conclusion is on one additional assumption along with two facts we know about our universe given the information available. Firstly, We know expansion can and does accelerate, even beyond the speed of light. Second, we know that our universe popped into existence with an expansion faster than light and that all the energy that created the matter we can see was created then as well.

Now if we assume that if the expansion of areas of the universe accelerates to a point, spontaneous creation of energy occurs, this would indicate that our pocket of universe was created this way and many more just like it have occurred elsewhere in the infinite expanding universe.

Like I said, I am in school for the subject so I'm not entirely sure what the math would be to try and figure out if this is possible yet. Hell, this may be just too outlandish to be possible.

Thoughts and discussion are more than welcome.

submitted by /u/KageSama19
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